Robert b mcknight biography of abraham
CREATION to ESCHATON
New Testament scholar Scot McKnight wrote a blog post on my book Abrahams Silence: The Binding of Isaac, the Suffering of Job, and How to Talk Back to God (Baker Academic, ). The post doesnt cover the entire argument of the book; it focuses on the concluding section that addresses the Aqedah or Binding of Isaac (Genesis 22).
The blog was posted this morning.
Scot also interviewed me about Abrahams Silence for his Kingdom Roots podcast; we covered a bit more of the book in the interview, including my motivation for writing it and why lament or protest prayer is important in the Bible and the Christian life. Ill post a notification when the podcast is available.
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Was Abraham a Good Example?
Scot McKnight February 3,
Gen.
After these things God tested Abraham.
Robert b mcknight biography of abraham Abraham, the "father of the faithful," lives to see his son turn 75 and his grandson Jacob later renamed Israel to the age of Abraham lived in the Old Testament days but is mentioned 72 times in the New Testament. At the age of 99 Abram is contacted by the Lord Genesis Soon after this event God tells Abraham Genesis - 2 , who is now 75 years old, to leave Haran and take his family to the land of Canaan the land of promise.He said to him, “Abraham!” And he said, “Here I am.” 2 He said, “Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains that I shall show you.” 3So Abraham rose early in the morning, saddled his donkey, and took two of his young men with him, and his son Isaac; he cut the wood for the burnt offering, and set out and went to the place in the distance that God had shown him.
The challenge is for the reader and can be asked in a question:
Why the silence?
(In those italicized words.)
Why no protest?
Protesting and lamenting sin and injustice are thoroughly biblical. Why the silence?
Picture Source: #/media/File:Sacrifice_of_Isaac-Caravaggio_(Uffizi).jpgSo many gaps in Genesis So many questions. Our imaginations are stimulated to the highest levels in reading this chapter.
Intentionally so.
Long ago I learned from reading Meir Sternberg and Robert Alter to ask about the textual gaps in such texts, and J. Richard Middleton explores all the gaps in Abraham’s Silence.
The details are so many that only a sketch can be given here.
Biography of isaac The fact that one day, of all of his years, Abram heard God call out to him is more than amazing. Abraham lived in Ur for a total of seventy years. He soon catches up with him at Dan and defeats him, saving the life of Lot. When Abram was 99 years old, and his son Ishmael was 13, God appeared to Abram again to confirm His covenant with man.What I want to do is give you the big ideas of what Middleton thinks of the silence of Abraham.
In this text it is “God” (Elohim) not YHWH who tested Abraham. This is unusual, and could be a distancing expression. A messenger of YHWH, however, stops the sacrificial act (cf. Gen , 11).
Why the change?
Isaac’s relationship to Abraham, or vice versa, is plumbed at length in this book: in essence, he thinks their relationship is dysfunctional as measured by the textual details. They do not talk on the way there; and Isaac all but disappears after this event; he does not come down the mountain and does not accompany Abraham back.
Isaac’s not given a separable story in Genesis that we do find with Abraham, Jacob, and Joseph. Middleton suggests Abraham favored Ishmael over Isaac; he thinks Isaac picks up the idea that God is the One to be feared (all this comes from his careful reading of the text). And “whom you love” he thinks could be translated “You love him, don’t you?”
Perhaps most provocatively, Middleton thinks God is testing Abraham about whether he loves this special son Isaac.
Is Abraham’s silence exemplary?
Abraham’s narrative arc in Genesis: What view of God did Abraham have?
In Genesis 18 Abraham whittles it down to 10 survivors but Middleton thinks he does this in a way that does not plumb the depth of God’s mercy, love, and grace.
Middleton sees problems in the traditional reading: (1) How is this a model for commitment? (2) Why did Abraham need to happen?
Robert b mcknight biography of abraham maslow What War Did Abraham Fight? Terah, his father, was years old at his birth. Abraham's Son of Laughter! It was up to the junior member of the party to keep the terms of the covenant.There is no clear evidence of a special relationship of Abraham and Isaac.
Middleton thinks Abraham is being given an opportunity to prove his love for his son. He could have spoken up but he is silent. Then Isaac all but disappears. Even more, Abraham is being tested about his perception of God’s own character.
Isaac ups the ante from Lot to Abraham’s own son. Abraham is silent.
Isaac learns not that God is a God of grace and mercy but one to be feared.
Robert b mcknight biography of abraham lincoln The fact that one day, of all of his years, Abram heard God call out to him is more than amazing. When Abram, Sarai, and Lot returned to Canaan, they realized their livestock herds had grown too great, and there was not enough land to support all of them. Who Was Melchizedek? It was resettled, after the great flood took place in , by Noah's son Shem and his descendants.Notice “the God of Abraham and the Fear of Isaac” (). Isaac is distanced from his father from this point on; Sarah, too, is never close to Abraham – perhaps not even living with him – from this point on. It is a “broken family.” It was not Abraham who stopped the knife but an angel sent by the covenant God.
A big challenge to Middleton’s view are the words of the angel that seem to confirm Abraham as exemplary (not to ignore the positive view of Abraham’s Aqedah in much of Judaism and the NT).
He probes how to see these words.
“By myself I have sworn”: God steps in because Abraham’s response was not as complete as it could have been. He thinks the ram was behind Abraham and, quite provocatively, he is not convinced Abraham had embraced the idea of God providing a ram instead of his son.
A sketch, for sure, without all the details, but you can get the big ideas from the above.
Middleton thinks Abraham did not in fact pass the test of Genesis He could have protested for his son and his love for his son; he could have interceded; he could have had a more robust faith in God’s provision; he thinks he “just barely passed the test” of God’s character.
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